“Oh” said Charley, “what a splendid fellow! I say, Harry, I’ll go out with him.”
“You’d better not.”
“Why not?”
“Why? just because if you do Mr. Grant will be down upon you, and your father won’t be very well pleased.”
“Nonsense,” cried Charley. “Father didn’t say I wasn’t to take him. I don’t think he’d care much. He’s not afraid of my breaking my neck. And then, Mr. Grant seemed to be only afraid of my being run off with—not of his horse being hurt. Here goes for it!” In another moment Charley had him saddled and bridled, and led him out into the yard.
“Why, I declare, he’s quite quiet; just like a lamb,” said Harry, in surprise.
“So he is,” replied Charley. “He’s a capital charger; and even if he does bolt, he can’t run five hundred miles at a stretch. If I turn his head to the prairies, the Rocky Mountains are the first things that will bring him up. So let him run if he likes, I don’t care a fig.” And springing lightly into the saddle, he cantered out of the yard, followed by his friend.
The young horse was a well-formed, showy animal, with a good deal of bone—perhaps too much for elegance. He was of a beautiful dark brown, and carried a high head and tail, with a high-stepping gait, that gave him a noble appearance. As Charley cantered along at a steady pace, he could discover no symptoms of the refractory spirit which had been ascribed to him.
“Let us strike out straight for the horizon now,” said Harry, after they had galloped half-a-mile or so along the beaten track. “See, here are the tracks of our friends.” Turning sharp round as he spoke, he leaped his pony over the heap that lined the road, and galloped away through the soft snow.
At this point the young horse began to show his evil spirit. Instead of following the other, he suddenly halted and began to back.